We select, you rate. Ratings are on a 20-point scale, and they're based on feedback from verified Tablet guests. If a hotel's rating falls below 16, it's gone — so your post-stay review is actually our most important quality-control tool.

Ratings Breakdown

Rooms19

Public Spaces19

Service18.5

Overall18.5

43

Reviews

Most recent review:

What I liked:

the outdoor space

What the hotel could do better:

Staff fusses over you without really being helpful (forgetting our orders but constantly asking us if everything was alright)

56Favorite this hotel — to remember it, to save it to your wish list, or simply to express yourself

Hotel Description

We expect big things from German design and Roomers doesn’t disappoint. Oana Rosen, a leader of Frankfurt’s new wave of repurposing old work spaces into cozy living spaces, has transformed this abandoned office building into a monument of elegant modern hospitality design.

Stepping into the lobby it feels less like a workplace and more like a futuristic zeppelin, filled with dark leather upholstery and bright, glossy metalwork. Inside you’ll find a five-story 24-hour bar and restaurant, the fully equipped Biorhythm fitness and wellness center, and, hidden away in the three bright white ultra-modern conference rooms beneath the white concrete bubble atop the hotel, an absolutely classic view of bustling Frankfurt and the river Main.

The guest rooms are palpably high-end, the luxury suites downright opulent, but all stay true to the building’s sleek minimal style. All the amenities you’d expect are present: comfortable and very functional bathrooms, flat-screen satellite television, and wireless internet.

Each of the bargain-priced 105 guest rooms and 11 luxury suites are ornate without losing their classic minimalist style and offer all the amenities you’d expect from a five-star hotel: opulent bathrooms and bedrooms, satellite, flat-screen TV, and Wi-Fi. Meanwhile you’re right in the heart of Frankfurt’s financial district, and close by to the opera house and the central train station, for connections to the rest of Germany and all of Europe.